It's more or less a rubber wetsuit in the new 52. I see it remaining that way on film. If it wasn't that way in the comics, then there would be something to suggest change. The only potential change I see is the suit being grey.Yes it would, sorry.
This isn't the 80s anymore. Rubber wetsuits like TDKR/TDK/BB/BAR/BF/BR/B89's are out of date, and there are numerous movies that show fabric-based superhero costumes working extremely well.
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Not mine. Just found it online but I thought it looks pretty cool.
It was and is grey, however.I never really thought of his suit as actually being gray in the same way I never thought of his cowl as blue. Black is his color, and everything else is just texture.
It was and is grey, however.
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Not mine. Just found it online but I thought it looks pretty cool.
Probably the closest I've seen to a tolerable non-'rubber' suit.It's more or less a rubber wetsuit in the new 52. I see it remaining that way on film. If it wasn't that way in the comics, then there would be something to suggest change. The only potential change I see is the suit being grey.
What indication is there that the New 52 suit is rubber? Armor doesn't have to be rubber. The main reason they even use rubber in the movies is because it's a middle ground between flexibility and substantiality, and it's not usually acknowledged as being rubber, since plain old rubber isn't exactly body armor material anyway.
In the real world, there's no material that has both flexibility and a level of durability that Batman's suit usually has. Real world body armor is bulky and doesn't work nearly as well as Batman's.
Something like Cap's suit could work. The neck system used for TDK/TDKR could work as well, but with smaller ears. The white eyes, however, I'm not sure would work on screen properly. Lenses overall on the mask, sure, but to have his eyes be white would look weird.
BTW, cryptic name, where'd you get that wonderful avvy?
I know the new 52 suit is based on Nolan's Batsuits, so I assumed the materials came with it lol.

Umm Wikipedia![]()
What indication is there that the New 52 suit is rubber? Armor doesn't have to be rubber. The main reason they even use rubber in the movies is because it's a middle ground between flexibility and substantiality, and it's not usually acknowledged as being rubber, since plain old rubber isn't exactly body armor material anyway.
In the real world, there's no material that has both flexibility and a level of durability that Batman's suit usually has. Real world body armor is bulky and doesn't work nearly as well as Batman's.
This from the Batsuit page on wikiCan you be more specific?![]()
Where on Wikipedia?
That's so weird, cause there's so little in common between them apart from the typical Batman visage. The only unique feature I can think of between them is maybe the lack of trunks? But Burton had already long-since done that.